Dr. Shires. No.
Mr. Specter. Well, fine, that concludes the deposition, thank you very much, Dr. Shires.
Dr. Shires. Are you interested in Oswald—that's my only other question?
Mr. Specter. Well, let's talk about it a little off the record.
(Discussion between Counsel Specter and witness Dr. Shires off the record at this point.)
Mr. Specter. Let's go back on the record. Dr. Shires, before concluding the deposition, permit me to ask you just a few additional questions about care for Lee Harvey Oswald.
First of all, I again show you Commission exhibit No. 392, the last two pages which purport to be an operative record of Parkland Memorial Hospital on November 24, 1963, concerning treatment of Mr. Oswald, with you listed as the surgeon, and I'll ask you to take a look at these two sheets and tell us whether or not that is a report which you prepared on treatment of Mr. Oswald?
Dr. Shires. Yes, it is.
Mr. Specter. Will you outline in a very general way what his condition was when you first saw him?
Dr. Shires. When he was first seen in the emergency room, he was unconscious, without blood pressure or pulse, but with an audible heart beat, and attempts, feeble though they were, attempts in respiration. There was an entrance wound over the left lower chest and the bullet could be felt subcutaneously over the lower chest lateral projecting this trajectory through the body and looking at his general condition, it was fairly obvious that the bullet had transgressed virtually every major organ and vessel in the abdominal cavity, which later proved to be the case.